We will never allow a border down Irish Sea, says Bradley
As the President of the European Council and someone who spent half of my life in the Soviet Bloc, I know what I'm talking about. When asked if she was prepared to vote down PM May on a Brexit deal, she said: "We don't want to be in that position".

Dodgers to unleash Kershaw on Braves after Game 1 victory
Kershaw (1-0) gave up just two hits and did not walk a batter while recording three strikeouts in an 85-pitch outing. Acuna and fellow rookie Ozzie Albies were held in check, as were veterans Freddie Freeman and Nick Markakis .

Facebook launches AI video-calling device Portal
The Portal + is a larger device, with a 15.6-inch 1080p display that can be swiveled to a portrait position, as well as landscape. Additionally, you can also receive $100 off any two devices, meaning a bundle of two Portal devices will be priced at $298.

A look at the deciding votes on Kavanaugh
Two Democrats, Joe Manchin of West Virginia, and Heidi Heitkamp of North Dakota, are also yet to declare their intentions. Just a single copy of the report was produced, which was not made public.

NLDS Game 1 Highlights: Rockies vs. Brewers | Stadium
Another win, and Milwaukee is into the NL Championship Series for the first time since its previous postseason appearance in 2011. Don't expect Joe Maddon's Cubs to lose back-to-back games at home in Wrigley Field.

What Consumers Pay For Petrol, Diesel After Price Cuts
Jaitley expressed confidence in maintaining the fiscal deficit target for the current financial year despite the reductions. West Bengal, Karnataka, Rajasthan and Andhra Pradesh states had recently themselves cut Value-Added Tax on fuels.

Possible storm has northern Gulf Coast in its sights
This system will directly impact the Gulf Coast States and will eventually spread some moisture our way by Thursday or Friday. Once it makes the transition in a tropical depression, or even a tropical storm, it will move north into the Gulf of Mexico.

Google is finally shutting down Google+ for good following security breach

The Wall Street Journal, reported that they have reviewed a memo prepared by Google's legal and policy staff, which indicated that disclosing the data breach could lead to scrutiny by government regulatory agencies.

The company said that it often notifies users when there are security issues and flaws and user data is affected, but its privacy and data protection office said the bug did not meet the threshold. In recent years, Google began to de-couple Google+ from its core services, and shifted its focus on standalone products like Google Photos.

In its long blog, Google said, "Over the years we've received feedback that people want to better understand how to control the data they choose to share with apps on Google+". The lawsuit was blocked in the High Court on Monday. "We made a decision to sunset the consumer version of Google+", the company said in the post.

The information accessed a user's profile information, including the name, email address, occupation, gender and age, according to the blog post, which added: "The bug meant that apps also had access to Profile fields that were shared with the user, but not marked as public".

It is surprising, however, that the move comes immediately after the disclosure of a security breach and a damning Wall Street Journal report. As a result (and because of the relatively low engagement shown by Google+ users in the seven years since the service was introduced), Google plans to retire it to consumers. The same report claimed Google covered the incident instead of making it public, fearing "immediate regulatory interest".

If you break down Google's announcement to the core you will realize that Google chose to shut downGoogle Plus because of low user interaction with the service and the prospect of investing lots of resources into the service to make it more attractive to users.

Many have long suspected that Google+ was in its final days, but nearly no-one could have predicted it would end like this. This, combined with the community's extremely low user base-90% of Google+ sessions are under 5 seconds-were enough for Google to be done with it for good. Google will also work with developers to give them time to adjust the required permissions for apps and services that will be affected by the changes.